
BLOOD BOUND: MY WITCH MATE
When Sera Thorne discovers she's fated to Lucien Ashcroft-the vampire prince whose ancestor was murdered by her witch bloodline-she knows their bond is a death sentence. Centuries of war have made their clans sworn enemies, kill on sight, no questions asked. But as mysterious deaths mirror the ancient murder that started it all, Sera and Lucien must uncover the truth behind the conspiracy that destroyed their ancestors' love and shattered two worlds. With a traitor hiding in the shadows and their people demanding blood, can they solve a centuries-old murder before history repeats itself, or will their bond be the final spark that burns both clans to ash?
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Chapter 6
The palace was different at night. Quieter, darker, full of shadows that seemed to move on their own. Sera couldn't sleep, too wired from the day's discoveries. She stood at her window, looking out at the city, when she felt Lucien approaching through the bond.
He knocked softly before entering. "You're awake."
"So are you."
He came to stand beside her at the window. They'd been doing this more often-existing in the same space without talking, the bond content just to have them near each other. It should have felt wrong, standing beside her enemy in comfortable silence. Instead, it felt natural.
"I spoke to my father," Lucien said finally. "Told him about Silas Greythorne."
Sera's head snapped toward him. "What did he say?"
"That Silas was a decorated councilor who served faithfully for two hundred years after Aldric's death. That his testimony at Morgana's trial was corroborated by other witnesses. That matching handwriting isn't proof of murder." Lucien's jaw was tight. "He thinks the bond has clouded my judgment. That I'm seeing conspiracies because I want to believe you."
"Are you?"
"I don't know anymore." He ran a hand through his hair. "I keep thinking about Silas. If he killed Aldric, why? What did he gain?"
"Maybe he opposed whatever reforms Aldric was planning."
"Everyone opposed them. Half the council thought Aldric was insane for even considering peace with witches." Lucien turned to face her fully. "But opposition isn't the same as murder. People disagreed with my ancestor all the time. They didn't kill him over it."
"Unless the reforms weren't just unpopular. Maybe they threatened something specific."
"Like what?"
Sera thought back to her research, to years of studying vampire history. "The war with witches kept your people unified. Gave them a common enemy, a reason to maintain strict hierarchy and strong military. If Aldric had succeeded in making peace-"
"It would have changed everything," Lucien finished. "Reduced the need for a standing army. Weakened the nobility's control. Forced vampires to share power with witches."
"Someone on that council had a lot to lose from peace. Enough to kill for it."
They were close now, closer than they'd been since the night of her capture. Sera could see the flecks of silver in Lucien's blue eyes, could feel his breath. The bond pulled between them, urging her to close the distance.
"This is dangerous," Lucien said quietly.
"The investigation?"
"All of it. The investigation, this bond, the way I keep wanting-" He stopped himself.
"Wanting what?"
Instead of answering, he took a step back. "I should go. It's late."
"Lucien, wait." Sera caught his arm. The contact sent sparks through the bond, made them both inhale sharply. "I need to ask you something. If we prove Morgana was innocent, if we show your father the truth... what happens to us?"
"There is no 'us.'"
"Isn't there?" She didn't let go. "You feel it. The bond gets stronger every day. Soon it won't just be uncomfortable to be apart. It'll be painful. Debilitating."
"I know."
"Then what do we do? Even if your father spares my life, I can't stay here. And you can't leave. We're trapped."
Lucien's expression was conflicted. "Complete bonds are rare. Most mates never activate the full connection-they live near each other but maintain separate lives. Maybe we can do that."
"Can we?" Sera challenged. "Because right now, just having you leave the room feels wrong. In a few weeks, what will it feel like? A few months?"
He pulled free from her grip. "I don't have answers, Sera. I'm trying to keep you alive. That's all I can focus on right now."
"No, you're trying not to think about the impossible situation we're in. You're avoiding it."
"Maybe I am." His voice hardened. "Because thinking about it means acknowledging that even if we solve this mystery, even if we prove everything you believe, we still can't be together. Our people have four hundred years of hatred between them. Your kind has killed people I knew, people I cared about. My kind has done the same to yours. How do we get past that?"
"I don't know," Sera admitted. "But I know that hiding from it won't help."
"And neither will pretending the bond makes any of this okay." Lucien moved toward the door. "Get some rest. Tomorrow we start looking into the other council members from 1624. See if anyone else had motive."
He left before she could respond.
Sera stood alone in the room, feeling his frustration and fear through the bond even after he was gone. He was right-the situation was impossible. But giving up wasn't an option either.
She returned to her desk, pulling out the council records Lucien had copied. Names and dates, correspondence and meeting notes. Somewhere in these papers was the truth about what happened that night in 1624.
A knock made her jump. Too light to be a guard. The door opened before she could respond, and Elara stepped inside.
"We need to talk," Elara said, closing the door behind her.
Sera tensed, very aware that she had no magic and Elara was a trained killer. "About what?"
"About Lucien. And what you're doing to him." Elara crossed her arms. "I've known him for two centuries. I've fought beside him, bled with him, watched him become one of the best warriors in the kingdom. And in three days, you've turned him into someone I barely recognize."
"I'm not doing anything to him. The bond-"
"The bond is making him weak," Elara interrupted. "He's questioning his father, investigating ancient history, defending you to the council. Do you know what they're saying? That he's been compromised. That the bond has made him a liability."
"That's not my fault."
"Isn't it?" Elara moved closer. "You could have run the night you felt the bond. Could have left the city, put distance between you. But you didn't. You walked right into vampire territory like you were meant to be there."
"The bond wouldn't let me leave. You know how it works."
"I know how it's supposed to work. I also know that Aldric and Morgana's bond ended with betrayal and murder." Elara's eyes were hard. "History is repeating itself. Can't you see that? Lucien is making the same mistakes his ancestor did, and it's going to get him killed."
"Or maybe," Sera said carefully, "history is giving us a chance to do better. To not make the same mistakes."
"You actually believe that." Elara shook her head. "You're either incredibly naive or incredibly manipulative. I haven't decided which."
"I'm neither. I'm just someone trying not to die while figuring out the truth."
"The truth." Elara's laugh was bitter. "You want the truth? Here it is: even if Morgana didn't kill Aldric, it doesn't matter. Your people have committed enough atrocities since then to justify everything we've done. The war isn't about one murder anymore. It's about centuries of blood and hate. Your truth won't change that."
She was right. Sera knew she was right. But she couldn't accept it, couldn't let four hundred years of war continue just because it had already gone on too long.
"Maybe not," Sera said. "But doing nothing guarantees nothing changes."
"And doing something guarantees more death. More pain." Elara headed for the door, paused. "Stay away from Lucien. Stop pulling him into this. Let him do his duty without the bond clouding everything. It's the only way either of you survives."
After she left, Sera sat in silence. Elara was scared-that much was clear. Scared for Lucien, scared of change, scared that history would repeat itself and she'd lose someone she cared about.
The problem was, Sera was scared too. Scared that she'd fail, that Lucien would lose everything because of her, that in trying to end the war she'd just make everything worse.
But fear had never stopped her before.
She pulled the council records closer and got back to work.
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8.3
When Eli is forced to enroll at Blackwood Academy, he thinks it is just another remote boarding school. But on his first night, he realizes the terrifying truth.
This school is a prison.
Trapped in endless, deadly time loops, students are forced to complete cruel, supernatural trials. Ghosts, cursed hallways, hidden rules, and unspeakable creatures hunt them after dark. The only way to stay alive is to solve mysteries, earn credits, and obey the academy's twisted commands.
No one remembers how they arrived.
No one has ever graduated.
No one leaves alive.
Eli must team up with other desperate students to uncover the academy's century-old secret. If they fail, they will be trapped in the nightmare forever.
At Blackwood Academy, survival is the only exam.

7.4
BLURB
It's when you're at your lowest you find out who truly is for you and those that have been your enemy in friend's clothing the whole time.
The moment my father was executed and Piper's father elected, I realised that my so-called best friend was my greatest enemy. She took everything I had, including my mate. And my mate did absolutely nothing to help me.
Just when I thought it was all over, the Goddess pairs me once again with the Greatest Demon of all time, the Alpha King. The same man responsible for my father's death.
I care less about love, all I want is revenge. But why does my heart find it hard to understand that?

8.3
I am Melissa Copper, chosen by the moon goddess as the fated mate of the Alpha triplets.
But they cruelly discarded me, choosing my twin sister over me at the Alpha's coronation ceremony.
They despised me, that I know, I have always seen it in their eyes, but the mate bond keeps drawing me closer to them.
Now, I have decided to leave, to end the whole circus. But when I begged them to reject me, they wouldn't do it.
They wouldn't let me go...
****
"Melissa, please come back to us!" They all echoed in unison.
"We want you...We have always wanted you!" Caleb said softly, his voice trailing off his breath, as he pinned me to the wall.
"We promise to treat you right!" Cypril said, his breath warm and ticklish against my fingers that he brought up to his lips.
"You will always be ours. Just come back already!" Cain's pleading eyes met mine as he leaned in, pressing a kiss on my lips, his hands tracing the corner of my ear.
"No," I said, my voice louder than I had expected it to be, with their bodies pressed against mine and their lips creating sparks across my body.

8.4
My hands trembled as I smoothed my dress, waiting for Alpha Arthur to return. He had survived the transplant. I thought our Fated bond would finally be sealed.
But when the heavy doors swung open, the warmth I expected was gone.
Arthur walked in clutching another woman, Diana. He looked at me like I was a stain on the rug.
"The Moon Goddess played a trick," he sneered, his eyes glazed with a chemical devotion. "My donor's blood chooses her. The blood bond overrides some archaic fate."
He didn't just reject me; he made me a servant in my own home. When Diana framed me for breaking a ring, Arthur didn't hesitate. He ordered the Silver Whip.
"Arthur, please! I'm pregnant!" I screamed, shielding my stomach.
"Stop lying to save your skin," he spat.
He lashed me ten times with wolfsbane-dipped leather. I lay in the snow, feeling the warm blood of my miscarriage soak the ground, while he walked away to comfort his mistress.
He killed his own son for a lie.
That night, I signed my rejection in blood and vanished into the darkness.
Five months later, I returned. Not as a weak Omega, but as the legendary White Wolf, holding the hand of the most powerful Alpha in the region.
Arthur fell to his knees in the mud when he saw me, weeping. "I'll do anything. I'll give up the title."
I looked down at him coldly and handed him the whip.
"Ten lashes," I whispered. "For the baby you killed."

7.5
I am the biological daughter of the wealthy Fitzpatrick family, but I spent my childhood eating out of dumpsters.
When I was finally brought back to the estate at age seven, I thought I would experience my parents' love.
Instead, my biological parents looked at my dirty clothes with raw disgust. They only cared about Hallie, the fake daughter who lived like a princess.
The moment I walked in, Hallie hurled a heavy ceramic cup at my head, slicing my hand open.
"Get out of my house!"
My father didn't even look at the blood. He raised his hand to strike me, accusing me of bringing trailer park rules into his home.
In my past life, I dropped to my knees and begged for their forgiveness. I endured their abuse, hoping they would eventually love me.
But they let the maids humiliate me, let Hallie steal my identity, and eventually threw me back onto the streets to die. Even my playboy Uncle Byron, the only person who ever showed me mercy, was driven to suicide by them.
I didn't understand why my own flesh and blood hated me so much, or why a vicious liar deserved everything while I was treated like a jinx.
Opening my eyes again, I was back on the exact day I first returned to the estate.
As my father raised his hand to hit me, I didn't cower.
Instead, I looked at the family patriarch and pointed directly at my notorious, alcoholic uncle.
"I want him to be my new guardian."

9.5
Sapphyra
9.5
Sapphyra used to have it all: a super-genius husband, a superhero career, and a dragon side she actually got along with.
Then everything went to hell.
When the world faced a threat she couldn't punch, Sapphyra tried to sacrifice herself so everyone she loved could escape. But Wyatt, her husband with backup plans for his backup plans, refused to let her die. He trapped her inside a digital coma, planning to wake her when the world settled down.
That was 100 years ago.
Now Sapphyra has ripped herself free and woken to a ruined city, a broken world, and a body she barely recognizes. Her powers are locked away. Her dragon side is caged. And the Class System controlling it all? Wyatt put it inside her.
Because of course he did.
It only gets messier. Guy, the charming golden retriever-energy hero she met inside the coma, is real-and so are his feelings for her. Meanwhile, Wyatt separated his mind from his body, so now his consciousness follows Sapphyra around like a brilliant, possessive bad hangover.
And then there's Rupert Domingo, the madman who escaped her digital nightmare and now rules the ruined city like his personal kingdom. He knows what happened while Sapphyra slept, and he'll give her answers...
If she survives his game first.
To win, Sapphyra has to rebuild her city, untangle her powers, face Wyatt's sins, and decide what scares her more: losing herself to grief, or becoming the dragon Rupert is desperate to wake up.